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Shoulders back, head high, she walked along the inclining sandy bottom. The camera tracked with her, eye to eye, and when she lost her footing and pushed off, she was aware of it pulling back and hovering overhead as she swam out from shore.

When Drogue called cut, the man with the float advanced toward her but she turned back. Wading out of the water she heard a little clatter of applause.

“Where’s the crew?” Lu Anne asked, shaking her hair. Vera Ricutti brought her a beach robe.

“We cleared the set,” Drogue told her. “We thought it would be friendlier just us.”

“Well, Walter,” she said happily, “if you-all are going to applaud I would like a lot of applause rather than a little.”

“Shall we bring them back?” he asked. “Want a claque?” He strode away from her, calling for his soldiers.

“O.K., muchachos! Once more for protection.”

“Arcs ready if you want it,” Hueffer told him.

“I don’t want it. I want reflectors in place.”

Lu Anne went to the trailer to have her hair dried and combed.

Light was fading; the sun seemed to hang suspended above a thin curl of purple cirrus cloud. They were running out of clear sky. A gray wall of rain was approaching from the northwest; the wind carried a few fat drops to spatter on the beach and people looked at the sky in alarm. In the end, the rain held off and they had time for two more takes of Lu Anne going to the water.

“I’ll give it to you two ways, Walter,” Lu Anne said.

Drogue was on the crane with Blakely and the camera operator. Eric Hueffer stood beside the truck watching the sky.

“Anything you want, babe,” Drogue told her.

Action was called, Lu Anne flung her suit aside and went in.

Vera brought her the robe and they started back to her trailer.

“That was the James Mason ‘think I’ll do a few laps around Catalina between Old-Fashioneds’ one,” she called to Drogue as she went by.

As they set up for the sky and ocean shot, Drogue looked grim.

“Watch this,” he told his assistant. “We’re gonna have the Lu Anne Happy Hour.”

“Is that a bad sign?” Hueffer asked him.

“Fuckin’ right. But it’s the up side.”

She came out again for their last take of the day and repeated the scene. The bathing suit was tossed aside. Numb with self-recognition, Edna went to her death.

“Hey, Lee,” Hueffer asked her as she came out of the water, “what was that called?”

“That,” she told him, clutching the robe about her shoulders, “is called Lupe Velez Takes a Dunk.”

Hueffer broke up. Drogue, Blakely, even the operator chortled as they clung to their uneasy perches.

When Lu Anne had passed, the laughter froze on Drogue’s face. He looked at Blakely and shrugged.

“She’s funny,” he said.

It had been dark for over half an hour when Walker’s road began its snaking descent from high desert to the canyon floor. His headlights were focused on a wall of deepening green that seemed to spin before him; the indifferently banked road felt as though it were falling away beneath his tires, threatening to send him out of control. At last, to his relief, the road ran flat and straight. He kept to the center, wary of animals, riders, pedestrians — and in less than a mile he saw the hotel sign.

Its entrance was tree-lined; a fountain played in front of the foyer. Its buildings were of white stucco that glowed under decorative lamps. To Walker after his weary drive it seemed all compounded of inviting sounds, liquefactive shadow and soft light.

An attendant took his bags and at the desk he found himself expected. The room to which he was conducted was as tasteful as its elegant extravagance could bear, a showy red-and-black room that suggested Spanish melodrama, theatrical sex and violence. Carmen. He overtipped the bellman with a ten from his winning roll.

He felt anxious and weary. On a whim, he had come to a place where he was without friends to see a woman whom he had no business to see. There were no other motives of consequence behind his journey.

In the shower he hummed an old number:

You take Sally, I’ll take Sue.

Makes no difference what you do.

Cocaine.

The breeze that came through his open balcony window was fragrant with sage, jasmine, eucalyptus. At Santa Anita his winner had been called O.K. So Far.

Among his supplies he found a packet of cologne-soaked towels, part of a first-class flight kit issued him on a flight that someone else had paid for. Not the Shakespeare people; there was no first class with them. Television. He dressed and brought out his works. He was preparing a snort, thinking O.K. So Far, when there sounded a knock on his door. He put the drugs away and went and opened it.

His visitor was Jon Axelrod, the unit manager.

“Hey, Gordon. Our house is”—he gave his hand a flip—“you know?”

“Thank you, Jon. I’m glad to be here. May I offer you some blow?”

Axelrod took a chair.

“I have to tell you the unit has very strict rules regarding the use of drugs. We report narcotics to the police. Otherwise we can’t get insurance.”

Walker spread a few lines out on his mirror.

“Stop at Siriwai’s?” Axelrod asked.

“Mexico’s not Mexico without the doctor.”

“Did you tell him we all miss him?”

“He knows.”

Axelrod removed a crisp U.S. twenty from his wallet, rolled it and took a snort. He was a slightly built man with an ageless fey face. He regarded Walker from the corners of his eyes, which were blue and bright with fractured whimsy. Walker took a line for himself and they sat in reflective silence for a moment.

“Lu Anne is good,” Axelrod said. “What I seen. Not a whole lot. But good stuff.”

“How’s her head?”

“She seems cheerful.”

“I can’t imagine,” Walker said, “what you mean by that.”

“She’s working well. We’re watching her. See, her husband just took their kids off on a trip. We weren’t expecting that. We thought — the guy’s a shrink, he’s her shrink. We put them all up on the budget. Then he leaves.”

“Where is she now?”

Axelrod smiled.

“Take a guess.”

Lu Anne, Walker thought, would be either screwing in a Jacuzzi or in church.

“In church?”

“Pretty good, fella. She went to church in town. Billy Bly took her down.”

Walker was not too pleased to hear about Bly.

“Billy’s keeping an eye on her,” Axelrod told him. “We’re trying not to leave her alone too much.”

“How come he’s here? What do you call him on the budget?”

“Stunt coordinator. Hey, we made some changes in the shooting script, Gordon. We have a lot of falls.”

Walker was not amused.

“We got him down for special effects. He supervises the guys in the water, the guys with the horses. Lu Anne likes him.”

“They keeping company?”

Axelrod looked puzzled. “No,” he said. “I mean, her old man just left.”

“It’s a bad sign,” Walker said, “when she goes to church.”

They finished what was on the pocket mirror.

“How’s Walter?” Walker asked.

“Walter’s the same. What a talent, huh, Gordon?”

“Fuckin’ A. Will he be happy to see me?”

“Maybe he’s scared you might get to Lu Anne. Maybe not.”

Walker said nothing.

“You know Walter, Gordo. He doesn’t care if people like him. He thinks most people are wienies.”